On a recent lunch break, John Kurzatkowski was enjoying two McDouble cheeseburgers, fries and a large Coke at an Oak Brook McDonald's.
"I like that they're $1," Kurzatkowski, 31, said of the cheeseburgers, which he buys about twice a week. While the physician recruiter doesn't think price is everything, he concedes it's a factor.
"I noticed that Wendy's (burgers) went to $1.19," he said. "And I noticed I went there less often."
Kurzatkowski is the quintessential customer McDonald's can't afford to lose.
In the midst of its first soft sales patch in nearly a decade, the Oak Brook-based burger giant is re-emphasizing its Dollar Menu, a 10-year-old idea that became the linchpin of the last turnaround in its U.S. business. The chain is shifting ad dollars to products for $1 and introducing new items to what's been a relatively staid assortment, including the two-patty McDouble, a fried chicken sandwich, yogurt parfait and side salad.
Analysts credit the renewed focus on the Dollar Menu with slowing what could have been a more rapid sales decline, but they underscore that the environment is more competitive than ever. Burger King and Wendy's are hitting hard on value and advertising premium items. The key for McDonald's, experts say, will be introducing compelling new products at attractive prices that keep customers like Kurzatkowski coming through the doors.
"We're aware that consumers are a little unsettled right now," said Neil Golden, chief marketing officer of McDonald's USA. "Whether that's higher gas prices or just overall not having as much week to week, we know the consumer is looking for great values in everything they're doing in the food arena. We want to make sure it's attractive to choose our restaurant."
Although Dollar Menu sales generally comprise just 13 to 15 percent of McDonald's sales in the U.S., the offerings do drive traffic to stores, where customers sometimes buy a more expensive product.
"There are those consumers who will make purchases on the Dollar Menu and those customers that are motivated by Dollar Menu (to come in) and see other options that are more appealing to them that day," Golden said.
Take Jerry Pitt of Palatine, who stops into McDonald's for lunch a few times a week. He says it's the parfait on the Dollar Menu that keeps him coming.
"It's the only fast-food place you can get yogurt and blueberries," he said. On a recent visit, Pitt ordered his usual parfait with a McChicken sandwich, both from the Dollar Menu, but he also succumbed to an upsell for $2.99.
"I added a Filet-o-Fish," he said.
Leading up to the initial sales decline in October, critics say, McDonald's did not have enough new products in 2012. With a number of new items in the wings for 2013, such as a McWrap sandwich, and other items in test, such as chicken wings, the current Dollar Menu focus likely gives the chain some breathing room.
"You have to have some compelling products in the pipeline to get people to the restaurants," Morningstar analyst R.J. Hottovy said, adding that there need to be some higher-margin impulse items that can easily be added on to meals otherwise based on the Dollar Menu. "You have to have a compelling lineup of those types of products as well."
Most Popular Stories
- Aetna Leaving California's Individual Health Insurance Market
- Honda Says Sorry About the Lack of Electric Fits
- Comcast Takes a Stake in a YouTube Content Provider
- Calories Count: Starbucks to Post the Numbers on Menu Boards
- OSH Selling Most of Its Stores to Lowe's
- Is Stock Balloon Really a Pinata?
- First Person Cured of AIDS Virus Wants to Help Others
- Google Wants to Share PRISM Information
- Katy Perry: Learned About Divorce Via Text Message
- Boeing to Build Stretch-Dreamliners
News-To-Go
Advertisement
Advertisement
News Column
McDonald's Doubles Down on Dollar Menu
March 10, 2013
Emily Bryson York
Advertisement
Story Tools



